Gotta say, Vector, don't think the drugs will solve all of your problems. In fact, once you're a diagnosed mental person (and I'm pretty sure it's something you'd want to tell a potential boyfriend, etc.) then it makes you Less desirable, despite the fact that you're on meds so it's all cleared up. Which it usually fully isn't.
Also. If you go on them, don't expect to ever be as happy again as you are now. You'll more or less go straight into living the average slight depression that normal people have.
I'm already ugly (or at least, that's what they tell me). I have AS. I speak in a flat tone of voice, am underweight, and have tics. I stutter. I dress poorly. I hunch over, I rock, I speak incomprehensibly (better recently, I'm happy to say), I hop around and skip through the halls. I'm violent. I'm arrogant. I'm clumsy. I drop things and run into walls. I constantly get lost. I'm prone to fits of rage and cry when people change schedules on me too quickly. Same thing for loud noises. I don't like being touched.
So you know what? I'm not really expecting anyone to love me, ever. It'd be nice if someone did, but I'm not expecting it. I'm expecting to die cold, alone, and friendless on a pile of proofs. It's what I've expected my entire life, and I imagine it's what I'll end up getting. That's not the concern--and it makes me sad sometimes, but not really
depressed.
I don't give a shit about the ecstatic happiness, since it doesn't do me any good. I end up happy for no reason, knowing I'm happy for no reason, and ending up needing to eat some 5 meals a day. I can't sleep. I'm irritable and bored with everything, and convinced that I'm some kind of messiah. I hide that, of course, since it's arrogant. It's delusional. I walk through the math library, giddy, thinking that every textbook was written by all those great men just for me. I laugh my way down the street. I feel antsy and energetic, like I've been drinking caffeine all day. It's a mental explosion. But you know what? It's there, and I sure as hell want it to go away... and no, it's not going away on its own.
There. Honesty.
Really, if you're smart enough, you can make sure you don't screw up when you're on a high. And once you've figured it out, it's pretty easy to wait out a low, because unlike a person with depression (the unlucky sods), yours is going to end in the forseeable future. it's a definite.
Intellect has nothing to do with it. I'm sure you love fighting mental battles and asking your friends "Is it smart to go on a walk at 11 in the night? Is that okay?"--every day of happiness, now and forever. Impaired judgment means, by the way, that your judgment is
actually impaired. It's not a matter of smart, it's a matter of your brain giving you the wrong answers when you ask it things.
Yup, you know the depression will end. And it's going to come back, ruining every moment that you're not hopped up on happy chemicals. Over and over and over again. The paranoia. The terror. The hallucinations. The delusions. The inability to eat. The inability to stop crying. The desire to kill oneself. The panic attacks. It's not something you can ride out. It's a constant struggle to determine what is real, what is false, whether or not you know a person. It's horrible. It happens to me for two weeks at 6-week intervals.
You think this is pleasant? Fuck off.
Solifuge: they referred me to a psychatrist. I asked for holistic methods. They said I need to go to a psychiatrist. I asked if there wasn't anything I could do. They said I need to go to a psychiatrist. I waited a couple weeks and saw someone else. They said I need to go to a psychiatrist. Same argument, same questions. They said I need to go to a psychiatrist.
I've had people telling me I needed to go on meds for a year now. I resisted them. I lied and told them I didn't think anyone was trying to kill me. I hid everything I could. I fought not to delude myself. I asked myself and said "no, it's not possible that that could happen to me." I decided I was stressed because of school. That must be why I get stressed and depressed. I improved my study habits and started getting 100%'s and top grades in everything. I made friends. I improved my eating habits. I started walking around more. I did what I could.
No difference--no, I'm sorry. Through the years, it's been getting worse. I did a back-analysis. I listened to my thoughts from distant days past, all those times when I said "there's two of me; one is happy, one is sad, and they aren't the same person." I remembered all those days when I woke up too early, and those weeks when I slept 12 hours a night. I remembered all the times when I said "this pattern doesn't match," and all those times I swept it aside. Kind of like all those times when I couldn't figure out what the hell was going on in a social situation, and I went "It is fine that I have no friends, because I am completely normal. I do not care what everyone says about me. I am normal and this is normal."
Are you happy now?
As far as Rosewood... there's a reason why I'm not even considering dating him for another year or two. That is not a rebound relationship. It is something entirely different. It is a hope, against all hopes, that maybe things will work between us. My personal belief is that things
may work in a couple of years. I am hoping.
I'm perfectly willing to leave him in my dust if he remains an immature dork with little sense of how to treat a lady. If he changes--as I am somehow certain he will change--then I think that things have a chance of working out.